The White House Correspondents’ Association said ‘Hamilton’ biographer Ron Chernow will be the main speaker at its annual dinner next year, departing from the long tradition of having a comedian roasting the president.

Manhattan prosecutors charged a California bible college in connection with an alleged wide-ranging scheme involving Newsweek’s former parent company to defraud lenders out of tens of millions of dollars.

Kim Jong Un visited a facility to oversee testing of a “newly developed ultramodern tactical weapon,” the first acknowledgment from the North that it has resumed weapons testing since engaging with the U.S. and South Korea this year.

Attorneys representing the Trump administration laid out an expansive view of a president’s power to control media access at a court hearing stemming from the revocation of a CNN reporter’s press credential.

Federal prosecutors have gathered evidence of the president’s participation in deals to buy the silence of a former adult-film actress and an ex-Playboy model. The deals have led Trump’s former lawyer to plead guilty to violating campaign-finance laws.

Advertising agencies that engaged in suspect ad-buying practices could be exposed to liability for wrongdoing such as wire fraud and racketeering, according to the industry trade group that uncovered the practices.

Vice Media plans to shrink its workforce by as much as 15% and cut its selection of digital sites by at least half, according to people familiar with the matter, the result of stalling growth at the onetime new-media darling.